Even better, if you only want a great texture and not the model, then no probs, it will extract all the maps needed for HD textures which can be used for rendering, bonus is it will even do the seamless tiling for you.

Yes you can import objects PhotoSculpt in zbrush. It's even done: via the import obj file 3d textured.In fact for nothing to hide I even designed the app for you specifically to your attention (zbruh users) because there is that you almost that manipulate objects 5 million quads without wincing.It seemed like a tool PhotoSculpt would meet your expectations

- Yes the 3D models are highly detailed.- Yes it is easy to use. I described the operation:First I place the left and right images in the interface and click the button 'sculpt'.The 3D object first appears on screen in lowpoly in 1 s. Then very quickly the density increases gradually as the program works. Everything is interactive in real time. You can zoom, rotate around the object, change of subdivision, etc. crop.In 40 seconds, the object is 0.5 million triangles.In 2 minutes he made 5 millionin 4 minutes it is the maximum that my camera can provide around 24 million. What is entirely unreasonable for ZBrush, (the files are 1 gb etc..) So when I'm there I simplyfied and the quality is fantastic.

Me, for comfort, I often interrupting the process of around one minute, the quality is already really good

Option 360 is required and I also like you I am requesting. But after study proves that it is very difficult. Everyone breaks the teeth above. Those who tried told me, it's just horrible, totally unusable, unimaginable even to talk to you sad!

So I chose to focus on the other option "Only 2 photos. With the final package of benefits:- It is much more precise- It is much faster- It is much more reliable, the reconstruction is automated by the algorithm without human intervention- There are already plenty of objects and scenery around us can be content with 2 photos- It's easier for the photographer, the time saved is considerable.- Ideal for making textures, UV map are rectangular always clean.

20 °: no no not at all a minimum. In fact it works quite well between 10 and 30 °.Optimum: What is surprising is that the optimum varies with the subject. I recommend a slight angle when the subject is difficult or very complex like a tree depth.Hype-O

0

Last edited by pilou on Fri Feb 05, 2010 12:37 am, edited 14 times in total.

I wonder how much it will cost. (Pilou? have you got any back-door info? )

I could really use such a software at modelling all our (most of the times rather ruinous) archaeological finds. Making a reconstruction, with straight walls and such, as it "should have looked" would not be a problem but investing time and money into documenting ruins in 3D is generally not economical.

I'm new to your forums and many thanks to Pilou and Mike for the multiple invitations.

I've used sketchup a lot last year. I'm a total fan of this application. I'm a design engineer, I know also most mechanical CAD packages (Catia 4&5, proe, ug, ideas, etc) and Sketchup blasted me as it was so userfriendly in comparison. I never thought this would be possible to design something that cool. Good job devs!

To your questions :Mac version: I'm sorry that's not possible now. I'm working full steam on the PC version. If this version work, they maybe I'll work on the mac version.

Price question: I'm doing a market study, that's really too soon to reply. Let's say I want the price to be 'normal'. Gaieus is right, what is 'normal' in every user's mind? That's a mystery now.

low/hi polygon extraction is a feature of PhotoSculpt. Pressing the < > buttons on the PhotoSculpt interface divides or multiply model size by 2. You get immediate feedback on screen.Additionaly a friend of mine have requested the 'save multiple' option. So you can now save whatever multiple polysizes with whatever maps in one go.

Archaeological use: That's a very good question, I have contacted people that work in this domain, I really think as you do Gaieus that my software can help them documenting findings in 3D. Some of them actually do that already. Some are using high end lasers, other use cameras and beamers to project bars, but they usually all describe something really cumbersome and expensive. On my side I have made some experiments on the site of Plagne, France, close to Geneva, where they recently spotted dinosaur foot steps. I got wonderfull results in no time as I shot the entire site in 12 minutes (about 50 shots). I can share that.

to Jolran: you seem to have a lot of expectations about PhotoSculpt. You or anyone else please don't hesitate to send me your wish list, I may not be able to do everything, but just keep asking, that's really the only way I can make the soft improve.

Any other question? Please do not hesitate!

Now my questions about sketchup pro, can someone help me?1. What is the practical polycount limit of sketchup pro when importing obj files (or stl files)?2. Can you use normal maps with sketchup pro? Can you do with another renderer?3. can you use displacement maps to push geometry with sketchup pro?

1 I am affraid to say that I believe that SU PRO import only 3ds (so 65 535 polys max by objects) , dwg, dxf, Collada (Dae), KMZ, formats So maybe a converter must be usedand for the other I believe for the moment that is2 No Yes3 Nowith the current version : maybe a day some plugs can makes that

I would have a question about keyboard strokes you mention. You obviously know that non-English keyboards tend to vary from country to country. On my (Hungarian) keyboard layout for instance, I have to use the Alt+Ctrl (or AltGr on the right) plus some other letter keyboard combination in order to get the < and > symbols. Would this affect the use of the software? (Currently I am unable to use some of the features of SketchUp because of this).

As for polycount in SU - it can depend on a lot of things. A whole archaeological site could obviously not be presented this way but there are workarounds like TIG's matrix proximity or Fredo's GhostComp plugins to display more complex geometry when it's near and simpler versions when they are in the distance.

Photo-realistic rendering with bump and displacement maps are generally done in external apps (or apps that - though plugins - work in SU itself). These are not "interactive" however although LightUp for instance "bakes" such info into the SU model and the you can walk around or export to other applications - so there are endless possibilities.

UV:This is simple: it's a regular grid flat projected onto the model, based on the camera main axis.

I like this as it basically gives best results: it always work, it makes no seams and all textures you create are directly fully usable onto the model.

UVs are automatically created when exporting the model. So you don't really mess with them. If by any chance you need to change something, you can still do it within your own 3d app.You cannot for instance polypaint or unwrap within photosculpt.

And for all people who doesent have PRO version(majority) import of obj might be problematic.One can use Ultimate Unwrap3d or Okino. The mentioned first is cheaper and has UV editing, good companion to Photo sculptmaybe

Well, I did say it was a naive question.I am not even sure if Directx and OpenGL have any compatibility issues or not, or whether some graphics cards are dependent on one or the other.I just need to do some more research for my own understanding.Thanks for your reply, hipe-0.

mitcorb wrote:Well, I did say it was a naive question.I am not even sure if Directx and OpenGL have any compatibility issues or not, or whether some graphics cards are dependent on one or the other.I just need to do some more research for my own understanding.Thanks for your reply, hipe-0.

Don't worry, there are no "naive questions". Hoping to have helped you or reassured you. I tested the software on xp, win 7 , vista, 32, 64 bits it runs on all configurations.I don't know about graphic cards that are opengl only. That may well exist on pc or maybe only with unix workstations. Anyone knows?